Examining Orthodox Theology

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Agree’d, An intermediate state after death for expiatory purification is a reality from East/West perspective.

I would agree that perhaps some do not agree with this particular theology, perhaps east/west, yet this has no bearing on what has taken place between the Church’s.

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You have the quotations flipped. The first quotation is the council, and the second is St. Mark of Ephesus. The word ‘pains’ is the Council’s word, not St. Mark’s. From what I recall, he vehemently opposed the idea that sins forgiven by God necessitate that the sinner be punished.
Right St Marks is the first quote, my mistake. 😉 I agree, the Saint made the point that forgiveness and punishment were opposing. I can remember where I read it.
 
You have the quotations flipped. The first quotation is the council, and the second is St. Mark of Ephesus. The word ‘pains’ is the Council’s word, not St. Mark’s. From what I recall, he vehemently opposed the idea that sins forgiven by God necessitate that the sinner be punished.
Correct. St Mark rejected the Latin concept of the temporal punishment of sin. Once sin has been forgiven, there is no further need for punishment. Constantine Tsipanlis provides this explanation of St Mark’s position:
Mark’s main argument against the Latin distinction between guilt and retribution is based on the Aristotelian concept of relationship between cause and causation, (αιτιον and αιτιατον); as long as sin is forgiven punishment is not required, because that which (sin) demanded punishment has been dissolved. The Latins, on the other hand, argued that even after the forgiveness of sin, punishment is required in order to satisfy divine justice since God’s holiness was offended by sin. (Intoduction to Eastern Patristic Thought and Orthodox Theology, pp. 209-210)
David B. Hart raises precisely this point in his essay “The Myth of Schism.” Does Orthodoxy and Catholicism agree on purgatory, Hart asks. He’s not sure:
The Eastern Church believes in sanctification after death, and perhaps the doctrine of Purgatory really asserts nothing more than that; but Rome has also traditionally spoken of it as ‘temporal punishment,’ which the pope may in whole or part remit. The problem here is it is difficult, from the Orthodox perspective, to see how it could be both. That is, if it is sanctification, then it is nothing other than salvation: that is, the transformation of our souls, by which the Holy Spirit conforms us to God, through all eternity, and frees us from the last residue of our perversity and selfishness. The Orthodox and Catholic Churches are as one, after all, in denying that salvation is either a magical transformation of the human being into something else or merely a forensic imputation of sinlessness to a sinful creature: it is a real glorification and organic transfiguration of the creature in Christ, one which never violates the integrity of our creatureliness, but which–by causing us to progress from sin to righteousness–really makes us partakers of the divine nature. Very well then: what then could it mean to remit purgation? Why, if it is sanctification, would one want such remission, and would it not then involve instead the very magical transformation of the creature into something beyond itself that the Orthodox and Catholic Churches both deny? These are not, granted, unanswerable questions, but they are questions as yet unanswered, and there is genuine need for a serious engagement on what the doctrinal formation regarding sanctification after death should be, and whether Roman and Orthodox traditions can be reconciled in a more than superficial way on this one issue. (“The Myth of Schism,” in Ecumenism Today, ed. Francesca Aran Murphy and Christopher Asprey, (Ashgate Publishing Co., 2008), p. 103.)
Contemporary Catholic versions of purgatory appear to approximate the Eastern understanding of post-mortem purification; but this question still remains: “What precisely is the temporal punishment of sin, and if this punishment is identical to sanctification, how can it be remitted by ecclesially sanctioned indulgences?”
 
The very question of whether the Orthodox “believe in Purgatory” is a flawed one. I might as well ask if Catholics believe in grace (the meaning of which differs between Latin and Eastern theology). The word became specifically attached to certain Latin teachings concerning Purgatory as a place where people are cleansed by painful fire. The proper answer is no, we do not believe in Purgatory as it historically has been taught by the Latin West, but we do believe in some form of cleansing after death.
What is ‘grace’ per Orthodoxy vis-a-vis Catholic understanding?
I’m glad this thread started, as it gives us an opportunity to discuss these subtle differences in a calm fashion.
 
My recollection of St. Mark’s point of argument was the idea of a different fire than the fire of hell, and that independent of a fire, that the foretaste of eternal damnation would involve suffering beyond earthly understanding. I may be wrong about this and would enjoy scholarly (name removed by moderator)ut.

I would also like to learn more of Florentine ideas on temporal punishment. The idea that once sin is forgiven there is nothing else to forgive, misses the point entirely. The fact that a sinful act has been forgiven in no way implies that the inclination to the sin has been eliminated; we still need to be purified of such disordered inclinations - typically using penance and asceticism to continue to purify ourselves. The image of a refining fire has been constantly used in this context.

I think that it is only in modern times is there a perceived, by some, dichotomy between pain and gain. But I don’t get it. Therapeutics can and often are painful and punishing. Ascetic regimes are punishing. Punishment had always been seen as a paternal responsibility. Although such ideas may seem dated, we have precious little to show for more indulgent means of child rearing. So, I am not sure why the idea of a punishment from the Father - so well-rooted in scripture - is now seen as suspect.
 
Contemporary Catholic versions of purgatory appear to approximate the Eastern understanding of post-mortem purification; but this question still remains: “What precisely is the temporal punishment of sin, and if this punishment is identical to sanctification, how can it be remitted by ecclesially sanctioned indulgences?”
That’s a very good question. Certainly, latin theology teaches both the need for satisfaction of sins forgiven, as well as purification from imperfections and sins not yet forgiven. The only thing that can do away with the need for satisfaction is perfect love/contrition. The satisfaction in purgatory is the penance that should have been done on Eath but wasn’t. You can be sorry in a manner that is complete and rooted in perfect love for God or sorry for less perfect motives. Confession will take away the sin in the less perfect motives for conversion, yes, but penance will still be required and this has always been given in proportion to the magnitude of the sin, I believe even in the early church when penitents would go to those condemned to martyrdom hoping to have their merits in martyrdom benefit them in their penance before the church?
 
What is ‘grace’ per Orthodoxy vis-a-vis Catholic understanding?
I’m glad this thread started, as it gives us an opportunity to discuss these subtle differences in a calm fashion.
I think the West has a tendency to look at grace and speak of its ‘created effects’. I am not so sure that the Eastern framework is very open to this concept of created effects, because grace is conceptualized as the divine energies enhypostatized in human hypostases.
 
I think the West has a tendency to look at grace and speak of its ‘created effects’. I am not so sure that the Eastern framework is very open to this concept of created effects, because grace is conceptualized as the divine energies enhypostatized in human hypostases.
I know I’ve previously asked you something similar before, but how about explaining the underlined part in a language that’s more accessible? Also created grace in latin theology refers to anything that has a beginning vs that which is eternal which would be divinity itself. The grace in us is God himself, which would be what Catholics call uncreated grace.
 
I know I’ve previously asked you something similar before, but how about explaining the underlined part in a language that’s more accessible? Also created grace in latin theology refers to anything that has a beginning vs that which is eternal which would be divinity itself. The grace in us is God himself, which would be what Catholics call uncreated grace.
Following the teachings of Leontius of Byzantium, the hypostatic union is described as the human nature (with its appropriate energy and will) subsisting in the hypostasis of the Word (that is, it is enhypostatic). The corollary of this is that those who are baptized into Christ and eat His divine flesh have the divine energies subsisting or enhypostatized in them by grace. Thus God is said to be God by nature while we are said to become gods by grace (and as St. John of Damascus points out, the name ‘god’ properly names the energy of God), for God has the uncreated energies by nature, while we only receive them by grace.
 
You can backread my recent posts so I don’t have to type the same thing again 😉
I read post-235 I don’t need to read any further, did you say something which contradicts elsewhere also?

The name purgatory is semantics it matters none at all, its a name, do you find it odd Greek/Latin would describe something differently? .

No one is talking about a particular place, where did you read this?

No one is talking about a particular punishment, where did you read that?

No one said anything about a 3rd seperate state, where is that stated?

This is what we are talking about…“An intermediate state after death for expiatory purification is a reality from East/West perspective.”👍
 
Indulgence is this…You praying for the dead to intercede for their Salvation while those souls are in…“An intermediate state after death for expiatory purification.”

Its penance for the salvation of souls.

Which is from the Lord to the Church through the power to bind and lose.

In the Byzantine Liturgy it is here…

CCC…

1481 The Byzantine Liturgy recognizes several formulas of absolution, in the form of invocation, which admirably express the mystery of forgiveness: “May the same God, who through the Prophet Nathan forgave David when he confessed his sins, who forgave Peter when he wept bitterly, the prostitute when she washed his feet with her tears, the publican, and the prodigal son, through me, a sinner, forgive you both in this life and in the next and enable you to appear before his awe-inspiring tribunal without condemnation, he who is blessed for ever and ever. Amen.”

Indulgance is closely linked to the Sacrament of Penance. To return to communion with God after having sinned is a process born out of Gods Grace, and we must ask for this Gift for ourselves and others, be it in this world or in their passing.
 
FYI: “Current Eschatology: Universal Salvation and the Problem of Hell” by John Sachs. It’s an excellent summary of contemporary Catholic reflection on matters eschatological. I think Orthodox readers might find it especially interesting. These two paragraphs on the particular judgment struck me:
But what is the nature of God’s judgment? If there were nothing more to final judgment than the finalizing of our own “fundamental option,” if that event were nothing more than the divine declaration that what we have freely made of our life will be so for eternity, if the process of Christian dying were nothing more than a “freezing” of what we have already accomplished (or failed to accomplish!), then the gospel would hardly be good news and we should approach death and judgment with horror. But strictly speaking, God’s final judgment can only be the final future fullness of God’s forgiving, life-giving judgment in the cross and resurrection of Christ. It cannot be merely a neutral “taking stock”; it is an expression of God’s real victory over sin and death, in which anything and everything which has been done in love is saved and perfected by God. Thus, God’s final act is a life-giving judgment which forgives, heals, purifies, and bestows fullness and, therefore, finality upon human life, that final identity for which it was created and toward which it is directed.
Human freedom is able to say “yes” to God finally and definitively only because of God’s grace, finally at work in the transforming, perfecting act of judgment. In a way similar to the “quasi-formal causality” which, according to Rahner, already characterizes the operation of grace throughout life, the final, gracious act of judgment on God’s part is truly creative of the finality for which human life longs. It does not create it out of nothing, but it fashions it from the “material” of a free history which has been lived by the creature, the unity in difference of its individual free actions and its fundamental option for God. It makes no sense to think of God’s final action as bringing a person’s freely chosen “no” to God to some kind of fullness and final definitiveness. Sin is a horrible reality but God does not “raise it up” and “save” it for eternity. And it makes little sense to imagine God as simply abandoning the sinner to his or her “no”—just as it makes no sense to imagine that “the saved” are merely confirmed in the state of their imperfect “yes” to God. It makes more sense to suppose that God can bring only a freely chosen human “yes”—only that which is of love, however small, tentative, and fragile—to fullness and, therefore, to definitiveness and finality. In a certain sense, therefore, grace alone is finally definitive and finalizing of the human person and for the human person.
The Catholic Church has come a long way since the Council of Florence.
 
Gary, I’d like to direct you to a conversation I had with Mary and others precisely on the question of the temporal punishment of sin: Indulgences in Modern Purgatory. Read through my various postings and tell me what you think. My thesis is that two models of the temporal punishment of sin has existed in the Latin Church for over 1500 years: the satisfaction model and the sanctification model. Until recently, the satisfaction model has been dominant, but during the past five decades the sanctification model appears to have become normative.

I strongly suspect that at the time of the Council of Florence, Latin theologians, following St Augustine, advanced the satisfaction model; and it was this understanding that was decisively rejected by St Mark of Ephesus and continues to be rejected by the Orthodox Church. But if the sanctification model has in fact become the ordinary teaching of the Catholic Church, then rapprochement between Catholics and Orthodox on the question of purgatory becomes a real possibility.

But as David Hart notes, the problem of indulgences remain. If indulgences are are juridical remission of punishment, then Orthodoxy will always reject them as contrary to the gospel. We do not believe who God retributively punishes in the after-life. When God forgives, he forgives all. God is the loving Father who runs down the road and welcomes his repentant son and then throws a great feast. If, on the other hand, indulgences are a form of intercession for healing and sanctification, then it makes no sense to present them in the language of satisfaction and remission.
 
No, it is not a rose by any other name. Purgatory is completely alien thing to Eastern theology.
I’m not saying you’re wrong about that, Constantine. I’m just saying that what I - in my young, limited life - have been taught in the Latin Church about “purgatory” is essentially what I’ve seen Orthodox Christians themselves say on the very subject.

Maybe you’ll say this indicates merely that the Latin Church has begun shedding the distinctly Latin components of the doctrine and, in many quarters, chosen to begin viewing and teaching this sort of thing from an eastern lens. Maybe that’s entirely true.

All I’m saying is, my experience has, on this matter, been uniform: (1) Orthodox say they don’t believe in purgatory. (2) When asked, they explain why they pray for the dead. They take care to avoid giving the impression that they teach or believe any definitive details beyond what they actually do. (3) And when they’re done explaining, I nonetheless find myself thinking, “that’s exactly what I was taught throughout my life in the Latin Church that ‘purgatory’ is.”
Yes, there is prayers for the dead, but that is where the similarities begin and end. There is no purgatorial fire,
That’s just an image, a metaphor.
no process of getting to heaven,
Definitive Catholic teaching doesn’t articulate any particular “process” either…
no third state.
The symbolic afterlife depicted in C.S. Lewis’ The Great Divorce doesn’t include any “third state” either, and yet it unquestionably includes purgatory.
Roman Catholics believe that when you are in purgatory, you are guaranteed to be in heaven at some point. That concept doesn’t exist in the East.
Again, this reminds me of Lewis’ The Great Divorce. What seems like a contradiction - are souls in purgatory guaranteed a “spot in heaven,” so to speak? - isn’t really one at all. If you’ve read the book (you probably have, I think), you know what I mean.
The fact that there are three paragraphs. You can say the same of many teachings in Roman Catholicism that is mentioned a few times only in the CCC. That doesn’t make it any less important or any less true.
Indeed.
If purgatory isn’t that specific or that important, I’m sure the Roman Catholic Church could have just trashed the idea at the Council of Florence to reunite with the Orthodox.
I didn’t say it wasn’t important. What I have been and am trying to say is that the implication often given in these discussions - that the Catholic Church has dogmatized an extraordinarily articulate, exhaustive, literal, juridical, and temporally bound description of the experience of souls undergoing purification after death - is just not true.

One can die, not be in heavenly glory, yet have hope of getting there. Orthodox agree with that. As I said above, the rest - purifying fire, toll houses, temporal “punishment” - is window dressing.
Same comment as above, if it isn’t what it is, why didn’t the Roman Church give way at Florence?
I recall reading something from Florence that would be useful in this discussion, but I can’t find it now.

I did, however, find this very Roman Catholic-sounding quote from the entirely canonical and accepted - for the Orthodox, that is - Orthodox Synod of Jerusalem (1672):

“[Some] depart into Hades, and there endure the punishment due to the sins they have committed. But they are aware of their future release from there, and are delivered by the Supreme Goodness, through the prayers of the Priests, and the good works which the relatives of each do for their Departed; especially the unbloody Sacrifice benefiting the most; which each offers particularly for his relatives that have fallen asleep, and which the Catholic and Apostolic Church offers daily for all alike.” - Synod of Jerusalem (1672)

(Source, which also cites the print source from which it got this translation)

Now compare that with the Tridentine quote provided by dvdjs:

“Whereas the Catholic Church, instructed by the Holy Ghost, has from the Sacred Scriptures and the ancient tradition of the Fathers taught in Councils and very recently in this Ecumenical synod (Sess. VI, cap. XXX; Sess. XXII cap.ii, iii) that there is a purgatory, and that the souls therein are helped by the suffrages of the faithful, but principally by the acceptable Sacrifice of the Altar; etc.”

Pretty similar. And Gary Taylor found this quote from Mark of Ephesus:

“But if souls have departed this life in faith and love, while nevertheless carrying away with themselves certain faults, whether small ones over which they have not repented at all, or greater ones for which - even though they have repented over them - they did not undertake to show fruits of repentance: such souls, we believe, must be cleansed from this kind of sins but not by means of some purgatorial fire or a definite punishment in some place.” (Source)

What Mark of Ephesus and I have in common, Constantine, is that neither of us believes that purgatory includes literal fire or is a place. When my Latin Catholic bishop excommunicates me for holding this opinion, I’ll let you know.
East and West have completely different understanding of completely different viewpoints. One case in point, some people will ask if Orthodox Churches think that Roman Catholic Sacraments are valid or not. Orthodoxy doesn’t view Sacraments in terms of validity or not.
They don’t use the word, but they do indeed have the concept. The question of whether any particular non-Orthodox group’s Mysteries “have grace” is the exact same thing.

Of course, the big difference there is that they don’t concern themselves with the status of other churches’ Mysteries, nor would their way of deciding be based on the same principles even if they did decide to come to a decision.
They don’t even have the same formulation as Roman Catholics do on what determines validity or not.
True, I wouldn’t think to deny that.
The very question of whether the Orthodox “believe in Purgatory” is a flawed one. I might as well ask if Catholics believe in grace (the meaning of which differs between Latin and Eastern theology). The word became specifically attached to certain Latin teachings concerning Purgatory as a place where people are cleansed by painful fire. The proper answer is no, we do not believe in Purgatory as it historically has been taught by the Latin West, but we do believe in some form of cleansing after death.
Now that’s a very reasonable response. Thank you, Cavaradossi. What you said makes perfect sense.
Correct. St Mark rejected the Latin concept of the temporal punishment of sin. Once sin has been forgiven, there is no further need for punishment.

Contemporary Catholic versions of purgatory appear to approximate the Eastern understanding of post-mortem purification; but this question still remains: “What precisely is the temporal punishment of sin, and if this punishment is identical to sanctification, how can it be remitted by ecclesially sanctioned indulgences?”
Interestingly enough, our contemporary Catechism of the Catholic Church speaks of temporal punishment itself as “an unhealthy attachment to creatures” which every sin entails, and it states that this punishment “must not be conceived of as a kind of vengeance inflicted by God from without, but as following from the very nature of sin” (CCC 1472).
My recollection of St. Mark’s point of argument was the idea of a different fire than the fire of hell, and that independent of a fire, that the foretaste of eternal damnation would involve suffering beyond earthly understanding. I may be wrong about this and would enjoy scholarly (name removed by moderator)ut.

I would also like to learn more of Florentine ideas on temporal punishment. The idea that once sin is forgiven there is nothing else to forgive, misses the point entirely. The fact that a sinful act has been forgiven in no way implies that the inclination to the sin has been eliminated; we still need to be purified of such disordered inclinations - typically using penance and asceticism to continue to purify ourselves. The image of a refining fire has been constantly used in this context.

I think that it is only in modern times is there a perceived, by some, dichotomy between pain and gain. But I don’t get it. Therapeutics can and often are painful and punishing. Ascetic regimes are punishing. Punishment had always been seen as a paternal responsibility. Although such ideas may seem dated, we have precious little to show for more indulgent means of child rearing. So, I am not sure why the idea of a punishment from the Father - so well-rooted in scripture - is now seen as suspect.
Great point. In fact, another eastern Catholic made the same point on another forum I was reading: therapeutic vs. punishment is a false dichotomy, spiritually speaking. Facing the consequences of our sins (punishment) helps us shed our attachment to them (healing).
 
Interestingly enough, our contemporary Catechism of the Catholic Church speaks of temporal punishment itself as “an unhealthy attachment to creatures” which every sin entails, and it states that this punishment “must not be conceived of as a kind of vengeance inflicted by God from without, but as following from the very nature of sin” (CCC 1472).
This is one of the key pieces of evidence for the claim that a sanctification model of purgatory has become normative in the Catholic Church. But has this always been the case? Compare, e.g., this passage from the great Catholic Byzantinist, Martin Jugie:
It follows from all this, that the principal–one might even say the unique–reason for the existence of Purgatory, is the temporal punishment due to sins committed after Baptism, since neither venial sin nor vicious inclination survives the first instant that follows death. Immediately on its entering Purgatory, the soul is perfectly holy, perfectly turned towards God, filled with the purest love. It has no means of bettering itself nor of progressing in virtue. That would be an impossibility after death, and it must suffering for love the just punishment which its since have merited. (Purgatory and the Means to Avoid It, p.5)
Jugie’s satisfaction construal of purgatory appears to be supported by Philip Quinn’s exegesis of St Thomas Aquinas:
The final effect of sin discussed by Aquinas is the debt of punishment. Sin makes man deserving of punishment (I-II 87, 1, ad 2). Sin so serious as to turn man away from God and destroy charity incur a debt of eternal punishment (I-II 87, 3). But not all sins are this serious; a man who is too fond of some mutable good but who would not offend God for its sake does not deserve eternal punishment on that account. … Like the stain of sin, the debt of punishment may remain after the act of sin has ended. Sin deserves punishment because it is a transgression of the order of divine justice, and so some sort of compensation must be paid if the equality of justice is to be restored. If the sinner pays any part of this compensation, he suffers, willingly or unwillingly, something contrary to what he would wish, because he has been too indulgent to his own will in transgressing God’s laws (I-II 87, 6). Punishment for sin suffered unwillingly is purely penal.
But if the sinner’s will has turned toward God, then his soul is united to God is no longer blemished with the stain of sin. Because such a sinner accepts the order of divine justice, he will take upon himself the punishment of his past sins by means of penitential exercises or will bear patiently the punishment God inflicts on him. In either case, his punishment is not purely penal but is also satisfactory since it is in some respect voluntary. Though satisfactory punishment is, considered in isolation, contrary to the will of the sinner who suffers it, it is voluntary when considered in the context of the purpose for which the sinner endures it. Hence, a debt of satisfactory punishment may remain and be discharged even after the stain of sin has been removed (I-II 87, 6). Satisfaction in the strict sense, then, pertains to the voluntary payment of the debt of punishment.
According to Aquinas, it would not be unjust for God to free man from sin without any satisfaction being made. For every sin that is an offense against God alone and for any sin to the extent that it is an offense against God, God could justly pardon the sin without exacting any penalty. Thus, “if He forgive sin, which has the formality of fault in that it is committed against Himself, He wrongs no one; just as anyone else, overlooking a personal trespass, without satisfaction, acts mercifully and not unjustly” (III 46, 2, ad 3). But neither is it unjust, though it does manifest severity, for God not to remit sin without penalty, and Aquinas holds that God has opted for severity (III 47, 3, ad 1). Therefore, unless satisfaction for sin is made voluntarily God will inflict involuntary suffering on sinners by way of punishment them as they deserve. (“Aquinas on Atonement,” in Trinity, Incarnation and Atonement, pp. 157-158
It is precisely this understanding of the temporal punishment of sin that was rejected by St Mark of Ephesus and continues to be rejected by Orthodox theologians today. If the Catholic Church has now moved beyond this and fully embraced a medicinal, therapeutic model, then the Orthodox will rejoice. I fully support, for example, this statement by Peter Kreeft:
“The reason for purgatory is not the past, not an external, legal punishment for past sins, as if our relationship with God were still under the old law. Rather, its reason is the future; it is our rehabilitation, it is training for heaven. For our relationship with God has been radically changed by Christ; we are adopted as his children, and our relationship is now fundamentally filial and familial, not legal. Purgatory is God’s loving parental discipline” (see Heb 12:5-14). (Catholic Christianity, pp. 149-150.
What this does mean is that Orthodox critics of the Catholic Church’s presentation of purgatory need to change their tune. Whatever may have been the case in the past, the simple fact is that many Catholic theologians (supported by the Catholic Catechism) are now advancing a construal of purgatory that appears to be compatible with the Orthodox understanding of the intermediate state and sanctification after death.

But I still agree with David Hart that a problem with indulgences remains. All one needs to do is to compare the respective documents on indulgences published by Pope Paul VI and Pope John Paul II.
 
The definition of indulgences presupposes that forgiveness has already taken place: “An indulgence is a remission before God of the temporal punishment due to sins whose guilt has already been forgiven” (Indulgentarium Doctrina 1). Indulgences in no way forgive sins. They deal only with punishments left after sins have been forgiven.

Thats from here…

google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=web&cd=4&ved=0CF8QFjAD&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.catholic.com%2Ftracts%2Fmyths-about-indulgences&ei=HGYpULjuD-ba6wGSroGgBA&usg=AFQjCNGoNfit6pdbSI0FewIultpuxywnew&sig2=5E52S64Nwbpbdkf-gNj5Hg

I believe Pope Paul VI is a good as it gets on indulgences. Though in this period of time the Church still used fire in the context with purgatory. Which CA quoted from below.

google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CEkQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.newadvent.org%2Flibrary%2Fdocs_pa06id.htm&ei=rmcpUKvvNeH40gGkroBw&usg=AFQjCNF52JuKzHqvyHSO4rEDzikU6tR_5Q&sig2=bsBhmKA2mE30rPpz5s1uPQ

I read the link which was interesting. Its an interesting topic. I don’t see the Church pushing away from this area since the Divine Mercy Chaplet was promulgated 2002. St Faustina in another who wrote on her visions of hell and purgatory and used fire in her description. She could be read on-line in full or just this topic. St Teresa of Avila mimicks her words course many years earlier in the prayers for those Souls, She also didn’t see purgatory as seperate from Heaven but a continued process of purification. According to the mystic, St. John of the Cross, the fire of Purgatory is God’s Love purifying our soul in preparation for the final beatific vision.

google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=web&cd=1&sqi=2&ved=0CEYQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fcloudoffire.blogspot.com%2F2009%2F03%2Fvisions-of-hell-purgatory-and-heaven.html&ei=E3spUNS6N-ji0QG4_oCYDA&usg=AFQjCNFA4mcDzqv9IdO76wmNDzXtphUyvA&sig2=Bft_4s7dhZDt3NtNGAxYrA

Cyprian of Carthage writes in A.D. 253:

“It is one thing to stand for pardon, another thing to attain to glory; it is one thing, when cast into prison, not to go out thence until one has paid the uttermost farthing; another thing at once to receive the wages of faith and courage. It is one thing, tortured by long suffering for sins, to be cleansed and long purged by fire; another to have purged all sins by suffering. It is one thing, in fine, to be in suspense till the sentence of God at the day of judgment; another to be at once crowned by the Lord.”

From the Sisters sight.

google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=web&cd=2&ved=0CEwQFjAB&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sistersofcarmel.com%2Fpurgatory.php&ei=ZXkpUOe6H-Ss0AGDyIGoAw&usg=AFQjCNF22p1EMJlD1nYV549Hi4hf9gurhA&sig2=I3kwkJkv3UNn8ELDMR-F9g
 
Following the teachings of Leontius of Byzantium, the hypostatic union is described as the human nature (with its appropriate energy and will) subsisting in the hypostasis of the Word (that is, it is enhypostatic). The corollary of this is that those who are baptized into Christ and eat His divine flesh have the divine energies subsisting or enhypostatized in them by grace. Thus God is said to be God by nature while we are said to become gods by grace (and as St. John of Damascus points out, the name ‘god’ properly names the energy of God), for God has the uncreated energies by nature, while we only receive them by grace.
There is actually nothing different from Catholic teaching in this explanation of the incarnation and divinization of Christians that you’ve given here at all. This is exactly the Catholic understanding, so perhaps you’d like to explain just what you see as the difference? Perhaps by stating your perception of what you think the catholic teaching is? Catholics will call grace what you call energies, or they will call it the indwelling of God in the baptized. Now the fact THAT you are, as you put it, ‘enhypostatized’ in God is certainly not eternal, hence, by latin terminology, its created grace, that fact is not eternal, nor is the act by which you are made enyhypostatic eternal, you have not always been so, nor is God by divine nature, incarnate. The energies themselves however, or in the West, indwelling Grace or the gift received (not the act of gifting us) is eternal, God himself. I truthfully dont quite get what this difference is even in subteleties, apart from using different terms for the realities, unless, rather its a simple case of misunderstanding latin teaching on the matter.
 
Gary, we appear to have hit a wall. I honestly don’t know how we get past Indulgences, especially if Paul VI’s interpretation remains the normative understanding for Catholicism. Orthodoxy rejects any notion of post-mortem punishment for the sake of satisfaction, penance, or retribution. Just as St Mark of Ephesus rejected this notion at the Council of Florence, so Orthodoxy rejects it today. After death sinners may need further liberation from sinful attachments and the intensification of repentance (both of which may entail consequential suffering); but we do not believe that God inflicts suffering after death in order to balance the scales of justice or reestablsh cosmic harmony or restore “the glory of God to its full majesty” (Paul VI). I believe these citations from St Isaac the Syrian speak for all (or at least most of) Orthodoxy:
Be a herald of God’s goodness, for God rules over you, unworthy though you are. Although your debt to Him is so very great, He is not seen exacting payment from you; and from the small works you do, He bestows great rewards upon you. Do not call God just, for His justice is not manifest in things concerning you. And if David calls Him just and upright, His Son revealed to us that He is good and kind. ‘He is good’, He says, ‘to the evil and to the impious.’ How can you call God just when you come across the Scriptural passage on the wage given to the workers? ‘Friend, I do thee no wrong: I choose to give unto this last even as unto thee. Or is thine eye evil because I am good?’ How can a man call God just when he comes across the passage on the prodigal son who wasted his wealth with riotous living, how for the compunction alone which he showed, the father ran and fell upon his neck and gave him authority over all his wealth? None other but His very Son said these things concerning Him, lest we doubt it, and thus bore witness concerning Him. Where, then, is God’s justice, for while we are sinners Christ died for us! But if here He is merciful, we may believe that He will not change.
So then, let us not attribute to God’s actions and His dealings with us any idea of requital. Rather, (we should speak of) fatherly provision, a wise dispensation, a perfect will which is concerned with our good, and complete love. If it is a case of love, then it is not one of requital; and if it is a case of requital, then it is not one of love. Love, when it operates, …] it looks to what is most advantageous in the future: it examines what is to come, and not things that are past.
If the world to come is entirely (the domain) of grace, love, mercy and goodness, and because the resurrection from the dead is also a demonstration of the mercifulness of God and of overflowing abundance of His love which cannot be repaid, how (can one think of) a dispensation in which are included requitals for our own good or evil (actions).
The Latin notion of the temporal punishment of sin simply does not make sense to the Orthodox apprehension of the gospel–at least it doesn’t make sense to my apprehension of the gospel.
 
Jugie’s satisfaction construal of purgatory appears to be supported by Philip Quinn’s exegesis of St Thomas Aquinas:

It is precisely this understanding of the temporal punishment of sin that was rejected by St Mark of Ephesus and continues to be rejected by Orthodox theologians today. If the Catholic Church has now moved beyond this and fully embraced a medicinal, therapeutic model, then the Orthodox will rejoice.
I again ask is there is some documentation to support the idea that “*t is precisely this understanding of the temporal punishment of sin that was rejected by St Mark of Ephesus” at Florence or even after. I would also like to know when the idea of remission of sin (vide supra) was rejected by the Orthodox.

I suppose that we can all agree on the medicinal model. We might even have agreement on the modern pain-free modern medicinal model - although I think that on reflection there might be some second thought on this - and I really wonder about its traction outside of the Eastern Orthodox West.

Perhaps we might also agree that other models exist, and that there are clearly not heretical since they, whatever the thinking of moderns, they have been in the church, the united church, from the earliest times, and that even Orthodox thinking has, apparently, developed on this matter.
But I still agree with David Hart that a problem with indulgences remains. All one needs to do is to compare the respective documents on indulgences published by Pope Paul VI and Pope John Paul II.
Perhaps we should start a thread with these documents.*
 
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